Speaking only as a viewer, Id like to be able to make micropayments
without thinking about it when watching content.

Its hard to get people to pay if there is a lot of simialr stuff out
there for free, but my personal hatred of adverts means Id gladly pay
to avoid them.

Say for example once Youtube goes ahead with pre-roll adverts, Id
rather give youtube $10 which would buy me 100 tubepoints, which are
then used every time I watch a video ad-free.

>From a creators point of view, its easy to get into a trap where the
'problem' becomes seen as being other creators giving stuff away for
free and therefore devaluing the wages of other creators. Some VJs on
a forum I help run get a bit angry with other VJs who work for free to
get started, because they believe it gives the clubs a large base of
people willing to work for free, and so less likely to pay them.

How small does a payment need to be to be classed as a micropayment?
Ive got an XBOX360 which has a marketplace that works on the basis of
buying points with a credit card, and then these points are used for
buying various things online through the 360, but the amounts in money
terms arent that low.

Cheers

Steve Elbows
 
--- In videoblogging@yahoogroups.com, "Roxanne Darling" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
>
> For sure, the internet has trained *consumers* not to pay for much of
> anything online.
> 
> However, what we are discussing here is a business to business
> transaction, and perhaps there is tipping point potential.  Business
> is used to paying for products and services. Many of the original
> content producers in the video space do not have the huge audience
> size to garner a seat at the table.
> 
> But there is micro-value in the aggregation. A micropayment system for
> "b2b" begins to make more sense in the marketplace.  It is the
> responsibility of we the producers though to train the marketplace to
> pay us, rather than expect payment if we keep delivering for free.
> 
> 
> r
> 
> 
> 
> On 1/28/07, Melissa Gira <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > And in the last few weeks, the one micropayment service I actually
> >  used and got something good out of, Bitpass, closed shop with little
> >  notice.
> >
> >  Bitpass ran the payment end for Mperia.com, which I had used in late
> >  2004/early 2005 to sell spoken word mp3s, which served as a sort of
> >  gateway drug into podcasting. When I could get a much larger
> >  audience out of podcasting, I stopped putting new work up at Mperia
> >  -- which had as much to do about the community coming up around
> >  podcasting as it did the shortcomings of Mperia.
> >
> >  Melissa
> >
> >  Melissa Gira
> >  Sexerati: Smart Sex
> >  The Future of Sex: Video Podcast
> >  sexerati.com
> >
> >  On Jan 28, 2007, at 10:17 AM, Mike Hudack wrote:
> >
> >  > Ah, micropayments, that favorite topic of mine! Way back when, long
> >  > before blip, I tried to build a micropayments service with a few of
> >  > the
> >  > folks now at blip. The challenges we saw then are the same
challenges
> >  > we see now: in order to do micropayments effectively you need a
system
> >  > to pool transactions, and to do this you need a compelling
> >  > collection of
> >  > content from a compelling collection of providers. At the end
of the
> >  > day building a real micropayments system is really about network
> >  > building. No one's managed to do this well.
> >  >
> >  >> -----Original Message-----
> >  >> From: videoblogging@yahoogroups.com
> >  >> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Ron Watson
> >  >> Sent: Sunday, January 28, 2007 9:00 AM
> >  >> To: videoblogging@yahoogroups.com
> >  >> Subject: Re: [videoblogging] Re: MyHeavy and Magnify and
> >  >> aggregators in general
> >  >>
> >  >> I was just thinking of micro-payments. Any info out there on
> >  >> the topic, or can we have a conversation.
> >  >>
> >  >> Cheers,
> >  >> Ron Watson
> >  >>
> >  >> Pawsitive Vybe
> >  >> 11659 Berrigan Ave
> >  >> Cedar Springs, MI 49319
> >  >> http://pawsitivevybe.com
> >  >>
> >  >> Personal Contact:
> >  >> 616.802.8923
> >  >> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >  >>
> >  >> On the Web:
> >  >> http://pawsitivevybe.com
> >  >> http://k9disc.com
> >  >> http://k9disc.blip.tv
> >  >>
> >  >>
> >  >> On Jan 27, 2007, at 11:26 AM, johnleeke wrote:
> >  >>
> >  >>> It is fascinating to read between the lines and learn business
> >  >>> diplomacy from Mike.
> >  >>>
> >  >>> I agree with David, when it comes to the legality and
> >  >> morality of the
> >  >>> issue, "opt out" simply empowers the illegal and immoral
actions of
> >  >>> these secondary agrigators and distributors of our content.
> >  >> They want
> >  >>> and take our content because it has a higher value that
> >  >> what they have
> >  >>> to pay for it. The fact that their business model is based
> >  >> on paying
> >  >>> absolutely nothing for the content is the problem.
> >  >>>
> >  >>> "We cannot afford it" sounds pretty lame when they have
> >  >> million dollar
> >  >>> budgets. But even on lesser budgets what happened to the "micro
> >  >>> payment" idea? Wern't computers supposed to make "micro payments"
> >  >>> practical? Why don't they set a policy of always paying,
> >  >> then pay what
> >  >>> they can negotiate with the content maker? Blip has done it
> >  >> so we know
> >  >>> it is possible. If they cannot arrive at an agreement with
> >  >> the content
> >  >>> makers, then they don't take the content.
> >  >>>
> >  >>> This seems pretty simple, and most of us learned it from
> >  >> our Mommies
> >  >>> by the time we were ten:
> >  >>>
> >  >>> "If it doesn't belong to you, then don't take it."
> >  >>>
> -- 
> Roxanne Darling
> "o ke kai" means "of the sea" in hawaiian
> 808-384-5554
> 
> http://www.beachwalks.tv
> http://www.barefeetshop.com
> http://www.barefeetstudios.com
> http://www.inthetransition.com
>


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